Rovanpera wins Rally Chile as Neuville closes on first WRC title

Toyota’s Kalle Rovanpera secured victory at Rally Chile on Sunday, mastering dense fog and treacherous conditions (above) to clinch his fourth win of the 2024 FIA World Rally Championship season. Driving a Toyota GR Yaris Rally1, the two-time and …

Toyota’s Kalle Rovanpera secured victory at Rally Chile on Sunday, mastering dense fog and treacherous conditions (above) to clinch his fourth win of the 2024 FIA World Rally Championship season.

Driving a Toyota GR Yaris Rally1, the two-time and reigning WRC champ edged out his Toyota Gazoo Racing teammate Elfyn Evans by 23.4s, mastering the increasingly difficult and damp gravel roads across Chile’s Bio Bio region.

Rovanpera made a cautious start to the 11th round of the season, admitting that the Chilean gravel didn’t suit his driving style on Friday’s opening leg. But as the rally progressed, found his rhythm. The turning point came on Saturday afternoon when he overhauled Evans in near-zero visibility, navigating through thick fog high up the mountain stages to seize a 15.1s lead heading into the short final leg.

The 23-year-old Finn, who’s taking on only a part-time campaign in 2024 to recharge his rallying batteries, remained unflappable in equally difficult conditions on Sunday, outpacing Evans on all but one of the final four stages to secure the 15th victory of his WRC career.

“It feels really good,” said Rovanpera. “Big thanks to the team — the car and everything worked perfectly. The win actually feels like a good one, but Friday did not feel so good and the conditions were really difficult all weekend, so, yes, it feels really good.”

Kalle Rovanpera has started only seven 2024 WRC rounds for Toyota, but he and co-driver Jonne Halttunen have now won four of them with their first Rally Chile victory. Toyota GAZOO Racing WRT

Hyundai Motorsport’s Ott Tanak completed the podium, trailing Evans by 20.5s in his i20 N Rally1. Despite the Estonian’s podium, Hyundai lost ground in the WRC manufacturers’ championship, with Toyota reducing the gap to just 17 points, courtesy of Rovanpera and Evans’ masterful performances and third factory entry Sebastien Ogier’s crucial Super Sunday maximum points haul.

Championship leader Thierry Neuville enjoyed a relatively drama-free run to fourth in his factory i20 N Rally1, a result which moves him even closer to a first drivers’ title as he tops the table by 29 points with just two rounds remaining. Neuville, a five-time runner-up in the WRC standings, can afford to lose a handful of points to both Evans and Ogier at next month’s Central European Rally and still lift the title there, providing he outscores teammate Tanak.

Fourth in Chile for Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville sets up a potential title-clincher on next month’s Central European Rally. Jaanus Ree/Red Bull Content Pool

While Ogier salvaged every point available from Super Sunday, his hopes for a ninth WRC title now appear slim. The Frenchman, who had the speed to challenge for victory, retired his Toyota on Saturday with suspension damage after striking a rock and rejoined on Sunday purely to put on a charge and mop up the points on offer.

Adrien Fourmaux was M-Sport Ford’s top finisher in fifth, trailing Neuville by 1m1.6s. The Frenchman’s result could have been even stronger had it not been for a one-minute penalty incurred for a late check-in in his Puma Rally1 on Friday.

Toyota’s rising star Sami Pajari impressed by finishing sixth on just his second Rally1 outing, while Fourmaux’s M-Sport Ford teammate Gregoire Munster followed closely behind in seventh.

Esapekka Lappi had been on course to finish eighth, but was forced to retire on the penultimate stage after a spin damaged his Hyundai’s radiator. The retirement also marked the conclusion of Lappi’s co-driver Janne Ferm’s distinguished WRC career after 90 starts, two wins and 15 podiums.

In WRC2, the second tier of international rallying, Yohan Rossel and Nikolay Gryazin’s 1-2 finish secured DG Sport Competition the 2024 WRC2 teams’ title.

Just 17.3s separated the Citroen C3 Rally2 pair. Frenchman Rossel was given a late advantage on Saturday night when event stewards awarded him a corrected time for Saturday’s penultimate stage, where he was held up behind WRC2 points leader Oliver Solberg, and he began Sunday’s final leg holding a 21.6s lead.

However, Rossel’s buffer steadily eroded as Gryazin closed in on Sunday’s four stages. A 10-second time penalty for a jump start only added to the tension, but Rossel kept his composure through the thick fog and treacherously muddy roads to claim victory. His win keeps his title hopes in the WRC2 drivers’ title alive.

Solberg, who had led earlier in the rally before suffering a costly wheel change on Saturday, could only manage fourth in class. The Toksport Skoda Fabia RS driver has now completed the maximum seven events allowed in WRC2, and although he currently leads the standings, the Swede will have to wait anxiously for the final two rounds to see whether Rossel or Sami Pajari, back in his WRC2 Yaris next time out, can overhaul him for the title.

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Citroen C3 driver Yohan Rossel’s WRC2 win keeps his championship hopes alive in the WRC’s second-tier category. McKlein/Motorsport Images

The WRC returns to Europe for its penultimate round, the Central European Rally, Oct. 17-20. Based out of the south-east German city of Bad Griessbach, the event will take crews on a multiple border-crossing journey on all-asphalt stages spanning Germany, Austria and the Czech Republic.

WRC Rally Chile, final positions after Leg Three, SS16
1 Kalle Rovanpera/Jonne Halttunen (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) 2h58m59.8s
2 Elfyn Evans/Scott Martin (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) +23.4s
3 Ott Tanak/Martin Jarveoja (Hyundai i20 N Rally1) +43.9s
4 Thierry Neuville/Martijn Wydaeghe (Hyundai i20 N Rally1) +1m01.1s
5 Adrien Fourmaux/Alexandre Coria Ford Puma Rally1) +2m02.7s
6 Sami Pajari/Enni Malkonen (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) +2m39.7s
7 Gregoire Munster/Louis Louka (Ford Puma Rally1) +2m47.7s
8 Yohan Rossel/Florian Barral Citroen C3 – WRC2 winner) +8m31.4s
9 Nikolay Gryazin/Konstantin Aleksandrov (Citroen C3 – WRC2) +8m48.7s
10 Gus Greensmith/Jonas Andersson (Skoda Fabia RS – WRC2) +8m52.1s

WRC Drivers’ Championship after 11 of 13 rounds
1 Neuville 207 points
2 Tanak 178
3 Ogier 166
4 Evans 161
5 Fourmaux 140

WRC Manufacturers’ Championship after 11 of 13 rounds
1 Hyundai Motorsport 482 points
2 Toyota Gazoo Racing 465
3 M-Sport Ford 245

Check out WRC.com, the official home of the FIA World Rally Championship. And for the ultimate WRC experience, sign up for a Rally.TV subscription to watch all stages of every rally live and on demand, whenever and wherever.

Tanak wins WRC Rally Chile, but Toyota clinches manufacturers’ crown

M-Sport Ford’s Ott Tanak and co-driver Martin Jarveoja became WRC Rally Chile winners for the second time on Sunday, while rival team Toyota Gazoo Racing secured the manufacturers’ championship crown. Tanak, driving a Ford Puma Rally1, seized the …

M-Sport Ford’s Ott Tanak and co-driver Martin Jarveoja became WRC Rally Chile winners for the second time on Sunday, while rival team Toyota Gazoo Racing secured the manufacturers’ championship crown.

Tanak, driving a Ford Puma Rally1, seized the lead of the all-gravel South American event on Friday’s opening leg and, thanks to clever tire compound choices, built a commanding buffer which he carried through to Sunday’s short final leg.

It was Tanak’s second win of the 2023 season, the first coming on the ice and snow of the Swedish Rally, and it marks the end of a frustrating run of DNFs and niggling problems for the Estonian ace in recent events. 

M-Sport Ford’s Ott Tanak and co-driver Martin Jarveoja celebrate their second WRC win of 2023.

Tanak went into the final day’s four special stages with a lead of 58.3s and played it relatively safe to end the rally with a 42.1s winning margin. But the focus was on the battle for second as Hyundai’s Teemu Suninen led teammate Thierry Neuville by 13.9s, with the team ruling out using team orders to calm their dual.

Neuville and Suninen were the two fastest drivers on both of Sunday morning’s stages, and the gap between them shrank to just 6.7s. It was Neuville who was fastest again on the second pass of Las Pataguas, while Suninen did not see the finish as he hit a tree stump on the inside of a right-hander, which immediately sent him sliding off the road and deep into the trees.

Suninen’s i20 N Rally 1 machine was out on the spot, elevating Neuville to the runner-up place. It also opened the door for Toyota Gazoo Racing to clinch the FIA World Rally Championship manufacturers’ title with two rallies to spare.

Suninen’s demise meant Toyota needed to score four bonus points more than Hyundai in the rally-closing Wolf Power Stage. And with Neuville the only Hyundai entry still running, it did exactly that, with GR Yaris Rally1 drivers Kalle Rovanpera and Elfyn Evans setting the first- and second-fastest times respectively.

“A lot of things happened today, so I am really happy and pleased with everybody in the team and everybody working for the team that we managed to secure it here,” said Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT sporting director Kaj Lindström. “It is not just the people here in Chile in the service park, but everyone working for us.”

As well as taking second on the Power Stage, Evans finished third overall in Chile, which was enough to keep the WRC drivers’ championship battle alive. He headed home his teammate and WRC points leader Rovanpera — who was celebrating his 23rd birthday on Sunday — by 1m4.1s and now takes the intra-team battle to at least the penultimate round, the inaugural Central European Rally later this month. 

However, with Rovanpera leading the WRC points by 31 points, post-Chile, and a maximum of just 60 on offer from the two remaining rallies, the Finn could clinch the title on the all-asphalt event.  

WRC points leader Kalle Rovanpera finished fourth in Chile, meaning the title battle remains unresolved. Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT

More than five minutes back from Rovanpera in a lonely fifth overall, and completing a GR Yaris 3-4-5, was Takamoto Katsuta. 

The remainder of the top-10 leaderboard comprised WRC2 runners, with Oliver Solberg holding on to the lead he’d grabbed on Saturday’s final stage to steer his Skoda Fabia RS to the win in international rallying’s second-tier category.

Fellow Skoda drivers Gus Greensmith and Sami Pajari — the up-and-coming Finn who’d looked set for the class win before major tire issues on Saturday’s final stage — completed the WRC2 podium, with Yohan Rossel (Citroen C3) and Nikolay Gryazin (Skoda) ensuring WRC2 runners packed the rest of the overall top 10.

Sweden’s Oliver Solberg wrapped up the WRC2 class honors, heading an all-Skoda podium. McKlein/Motorsport Images

The WRC returns to Europe next for the Central European Rally, a brand-new, tri-country event. The all-asphalt event takes places Oct. 26 -29 with a unique format that includes multiple border crossings to take in special stages in Germany, Austria and Czech Republic.

WRC Rally Chile, final positions after Day Three, SS16
1 Ott Tanak/Martin Jarveoja (Ford Puma Rally1) 3h06m38.1s
2 Thierry Neuville/Martijn Wydaeghe (Hyundai i20 N Rally1) +42.1s
3 Elfyn Evans/Scott Martin (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) +1m06.9s
4 Kalle Rovanpera/Jonne Halttunen (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) +2m11.0s
5 Takamoto Katsuta/Aaron Johnson (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) +4m41.5s
6 Oliver Solberg/Elliott Edmondson (Skoda Fabia RS – WRC2 winner) +8m18.5s
7 Gus Greensmith/Jonas Andresson (Skoda Fabia RS – WRC2) +8m44.3s
8 Sami Pajari/Enni Malkonen (Skoda Fabia RS – WRC2) +9m20.6s
9 Yohan Rossel/Arnaud Dunand (Citroen C3 – WRC2) +9m53.9s
10 Nikolay Gryazin/Konstantin Aleksandrov (Skoda Fabia RS – WRC2) +10m08.2s

WRC Drivers’ Championship after 11 rounds
1
Rovanpera 217 points
2 Evans 186
3 Neuville 155
4 Tanak 146
5 Sebastien Ogier 99

WRC Manufacturers’ Championship after 11 rounds
1
Toyota Gazoo Racing 466 points (2023 champions)
2 Hyundai Motorsport 360
3 M-Sport Ford 247  

Check out WRC.com, the official home of the FIA World Rally Championship. And for the ultimate WRC experience, sign up for a Rally.TV subscription to watch all stages of every rally live and on demand, whenever and wherever.

Tanak calls it right on rubber, closes in on WRC Rally Chile victory

Ott Tanak closed in on back-to-back WRC Rally Chile victories after dominating Saturday’s stages to build a commanding lead heading into Sunday’s short final leg. The M-Sport Ford Puma Rally1 driver (above) began the penultimate leg – the longest of …

Ott Tanak closed in on back-to-back WRC Rally Chile victories after dominating Saturday’s stages to build a commanding lead heading into Sunday’s short final leg.

The M-Sport Ford Puma Rally1 driver (above) began the penultimate leg – the longest of the South American all-gravel event – with a small 4.2s advantage over Hyundai Motorsport’s Teemu Suninen, but ended the day’s six special stages a whopping 58.3s clear after a leg which delivered trouble for FIA World Rally Championship title contenders Kalle Rovanpera and Elfyn Evans. 

Saturday’s stages were longer, twistier and much more abrasive than Friday’s six-stage affair. And while Tanak’s rivals leaned towards Pirelli’s soft compound rubber for the morning loop, the Estonian’s decision to take four hard tires with him made a world of difference. It was something of a reversal of his all-softs Friday strategy, but once again it proved mighty effective. 

With their rubber worn down by the time they’d reached the final stage before the midday service halt, Suninen and Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 drivers Evans and Rovanpera all leaked chunks of time. Tanak, whose hard choice boasted a longer lifespan, took full advantage and extended his lead to 47.8s by service.

Teemu Suninen (above) holds second for Hyundai, but catching leader Ott Tanak would be a big ask now.

Tire preservation remained a key factor on the repeated afternoon loop but, with the hard work done, Tanak and co-driver Martin Jarveoja were able to manage their lead over Suninen’s Hyundai i20N Rally1. Victory on Sunday would ensure the pair retain a 100-percent victory record in Chile, a rally which featured on the WRC calendar just once previously, back in 2019. 

“It’s been an extremely good day,” Tanak admitted. “It’s been working in our favor. On the stages which were bad, we had the advantage to slow down, but when it was needed, we were able to speed up. It’s not finished yet, so we need to keep it going tomorrow.”

Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville was hindered by a slow puncture in the day’s opening stage, but passed Evans late in the morning to make it two i20 N Rally1 cars in the overall top three. He and teammate Suninen were split by 13.9s at the end of the leg, and their 2-3 position means that, barring any changes on Sunday, Toyota Gazoo Racing will be unable to win the WRC manufacturers’ crown on Sunday. 

For reigning WRC champ and 2023 points leader Rovanpera, who ended the day 10.7s behind teammate Evans in fifth overall, the wait for a second drivers’ title is also likely to go on.

Finn Rovanpera, celebrates his 23rd birthday on Sunday, carried a commanding 33-point lead into this 11th round of the season, with a maximum of 90 available from the final three rounds. But he needs to bank a score 28 points higher than teammate Evans if he’s to secure the title with two rallies remaining – an unlikely proposition as things stand.

WRC points leader Kalle Rovanpera was just one of the leading crews experiencing tire wear issues.

Takamoto Katsuta experienced tire troubles of his own in the final stage of the morning loop, but the Japanese driver remained a lonely sixth overall in another GR Yaris.

In WRC2, the second tier of international rallying, Oliver Solberg Solberg headed the class by a reasonably comfortable 25.3s after a frustrating final stage for erstwhile leader Sami Pajari. 

Finn Pajari, saw a 5.7s lead over fellow Skoda Fabia RS driver Solberg after the penultimate stage dissolve, and then some, through the final 17.84-mile Maria de las Cruces test as he struggled with debilitating tire wear.

Just to rub it in, Gus Greensmith also moved past Pajari in that final stage, making it three Skodas in the WRC2 top-three positions.   

Citroen C3 driver Yohan Rossel was fourth in WRC2 and completed the overall top 10 after problems late in the day for a pair of Puma Rally1 debutants, Gregoire Munster and local hero Alberto Heller. 

Skoda driver Oliver Solberg (above) headed the WRC2 class after tire woes for former leader Sami Pajari. McKlein/Motorsport Images

Sunday’s final leg consists of the 8.2-mile Las Pataguas and 8.61-mile El Ponen stages, each tackled twice and punctuated by a brief 15-minute service halt. The second pass of El Ponen is the rally-closing Wolf Power Stage, where vital bonus points are up for grabs.

WRC Rally Chile, leading positions after Day Two, SS12
1 Ott Tanak/Martin Jarveoja (Ford Puma Rally1) 2h36m16.2s
2 Teemu Suninen/Mikko Markkula (Hyundai i20 N Rally1) +58.3s
3 Thierry Neuville/Martijn Wydaeghe (Hyundai i20 N Rally1) +1m12.2s
4 Elfyn Evans/Scott Martin (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) +1m22.9s
5 Kalle Rovanpera/Jonne Halttunen (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) +2m24.0s
6 Takamoto Katsuta/Aaron Johnson (Toyota GR Yaris Rally1) +4m07.2s
7 Oliver Solberg/Elliott Edmondson (Skoda Fabia RS – WRC2 leader) +6m52.7s
8 Gus Greensmith/Jonas Andresson (Skoda Fabia RS – WRC2) +7m18.0s
9 Sami Pajari/Enni Malkonen (Skoda Fabia RS – WRC2) +7m36.6s
10 Yohan Rossel/Arnaud Dunand (Citroen C3 – WRC2) +8m01.1s